Patents Examined by Richmond Dorvil
  • Patent number: 10339958
    Abstract: Detecting and monitoring legacy devices (such as appliances in a home) using audio sensing is disclosed. Methods and systems are provided for transforming audio data captured by the sensor to afford privacy when speech is overheard by the sensor. Because these transformations may negatively impact the ability to detect/monitor devices, an effective transformation is determined based on both privacy and detectability concerns.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 9, 2016
    Date of Patent: July 2, 2019
    Assignee: ARRIS Enterprises LLC
    Inventors: Anthony J. Braskich, Venugopal Vasudevan
  • Patent number: 7376557
    Abstract: A privacy apparatus adds a privacy sound based on a speaker's own voice into the environment, thereby confusing listeners as to which of the sounds is the real source. This permits disruption of the ability to understand the source speech of the user by eliminating segregation cues that the auditory system uses to interpret speech. The privacy apparatus minimizes segregation cues. The privacy apparatus is relatively quiet and thus easily acceptable in a typical open floor design office space. The privacy apparatus contains an A/D converter that converts the speech into a digital signal, a DSP that converts the digital signal into a privacy signal with pre-recorded speech fragments that are summed so that the speech fragments at least partly overlap one another, a D/A converter that converts the privacy signal into an output signal and one or more loudspeakers from which the output signal is emitted.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 4, 2006
    Date of Patent: May 20, 2008
    Assignee: Herman Miller, Inc.
    Inventors: Jeffrey Specht, Daniel Mapes-Riordan, William DeKruif
  • Patent number: 7295982
    Abstract: The present invention relates to a system and method for automatically verifying that a message received from a user is intelligible. In an exemplary embodiment, a message is received from the user. A speech level of the user's message may be measured and compared to a pre-determined speech level threshold to determine whether the measured speech level is below the pre-determined speech level threshold. A signal-to-noise ratio of the user's message may be measured and compared to a pre-determined signal-to-noise ratio threshold to determine whether the measured signal-to-noise ratio of the message is below the pre-determined signal-to-noise ratio threshold. An estimate of intelligibility for the user's message may be calculated and compared to an intelligibility threshold to determine whether the calculated estimate of intelligibility is below the intelligibility threshold.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 19, 2001
    Date of Patent: November 13, 2007
    Assignee: AT&T Corp.
    Inventors: Harvey S. Cohen, Randy G. Goldberg, Kenneth H. Rosen
  • Patent number: 6134321
    Abstract: A telephone line monitoring circuit uses an optoisolator to convert the telephone line current to a voltage which is applied to the input of an AID converter. The A/D values are coarse values representing telephone line current. The A/D is sampled at a predetermined interval to identify changes introduced by the telephone company central office, and to take those changes into account when deciding if an extension telephone has gone off-hook. When a customer causes an extension telephone to go off-hook, the line current divides between the extension telephone and the IRD modem, and such change is detected.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 16, 1998
    Date of Patent: October 17, 2000
    Assignee: Thomas Licensing S.A.
    Inventor: Robert Alan Pitsch
  • Patent number: 5390283
    Abstract: A genetic algorithm is used to search for optimal configurations of a computer controlled pick and place machine, which places parts on printed circuit boards. Configurations include: assigning grippers to pipettes of the machine; assigning parts, destined for the printed circuit boards, to feeders of the machine; assigning parts to pipettes; and determining time intervals and orders in which parts are to be placed. The genetic algorithm is applied to chromosome strings representing parameters for determining machine configuration. A heuristic layout generator generates machine configurations from the chromosome strings.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 23, 1992
    Date of Patent: February 14, 1995
    Assignee: North American Philips Corporation
    Inventors: Larry J. Eshelman, James D. Schaffer